Windows 8 BSoD on clean install

BengalCat

Reputable
May 31, 2014
4
0
4,510
Hello,
For about a month my computer was stuttering and freezing randomly. Yesterday i got a BSoDs caused by CLOCK_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT and DRIVER_OVERRAN_STACK_BUFFER. I have "resetted" it in Windows. While screen "We are setting everything up" i had another BSoD. After restart, installation finished, and I installed all necessary drivers. And another crash. I checked memory with Windows Memory Check tool. RAM was ok. More BSoDs. I resetted/reinstalled it again. Now when I boot it up, it just crashes after about 2 minutes. Here are my specs:

Intel Core I5 2500K 3.3Ghz
Asus GeForce GTX660 2GB
ASRock P67 PRO3
4x Kingston HyperX 4GB 1333MHz DDR3
Seagate 1TB SATAIII 7200RPM
OCZ StealthXStream 2 500W P SU 80Plus

Here are files from /Minidump/ :
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0Bxo2_-BBmLraOXNKc0F6TVdlaUk&usp=sharing

Please, can somone help me with this annoying problem?
 

MaiTriCks

Honorable
May 31, 2014
11
0
10,510
This seems like an upgrade gone bad, and perhaps the method of using this clean install is not very clean.

How did you upgrade?

Your computer can be fully restored to a factory condition if you access factory restore on start up. Tapping ESC on start up to access the bios or recovery options ranges from manufacturer to manufacturer, so F5, F9 and F12 all may work. Tap repeatedly.
 

BengalCat

Reputable
May 31, 2014
4
0
4,510


Thank you for respond.

Restoring to factory condition was the first thing I did after geting BSoD.

Now, I have reinstalled system from DVD, and after first bootup I got:
"ATTEMPTED_EXECUTE_OF_NOEXECUTE_MEMORY"
followed by "WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR"
and "KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED".

Any ideas?
 

dvs_xerxes

Honorable
Sep 7, 2013
36
0
10,560
Are you overclocking? those kind of errors sound like an unstable overclock especially the WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR and CLOCK_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT. Check your CPU if its over heating. if not then you have to try installing windows bare bones, by taking out all the ram except one stick and by removing the videocard, use the onboard.

If it crashes take that stick off and set it a side and try another, if all the ram works, check the video card. if neither works, meaning if the computer still crashes, with all the ram, and video card, either you have a bad cpu or motherboard
 

BengalCat

Reputable
May 31, 2014
4
0
4,510


Thanks for replay.

I WAS overclocking CPU before (with something like "boost settings" in BIOS), but right after first stutter i switched it do default. GPU wasen't overclocked, I just used Asus GPU Tweak to check performance.

I tested computer with only one stick of RAM at the time, and it crashed every time. I can't test with out graphic card right now, because I only have HDMI monitor. But it gives me an idea - after stuttering, nvidia driver started crashing too. I'll probably take graphic card to computers repair service, and get it checked there...